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Wind In the Wires

Patrick Wolf

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Album Review

There's little doubt that the emotional turbulence of youth serves as the artist's first muse. As we grow older that muse takes on more and more baggage, rendering its initial miserable/joyous purity lost amongst the responsibilities of adulthood. Multi-instrumentalist/singer/songwriter Patrick Wolf harnessed that angst on 2003's moody and apocalyptic Lycanthropy, and has refined it without losing any of its edge on his latest: the elegant, volatile and still kind of apocalyptic Wind in the Wires. Wolf's voice has matured — he's still only 21 — into a lonely and powerful tool of judgment. He pines like Ian McCulloch — there's a definite Echo & the Bunnyman tone to the whole affair — and takes the occasional left turn into Jeff Buckley-falsetto territory, always in the service of the song — the stark "Railway House" blends the two effortlessly. Lyrically, Wolf may revel in the Gothic imagery of artists like Nick Cave and Tom Waits — "The circus girl fell off her horse and now she's paralyzed/the hitchhiker was bound and gagged, raped on the roadside" — but there's a young man's honest pain behind all of the flowery English vernacular. Like the Divine Comedy's Neil Hannon, he both loathes and lusts for the U.K. Whether he's walking alone along its windswept moors ("Ghost Song") or preparing for its annihilation — the brutal "Tristan" — he's armed to the teeth with an arsenal of violins, pump organs and his trusty laptop to tell its all too familiar story, that alienation is universal and art is its only trusted interpreter.

Customer Reviews

Thumbs up For Wind In The Wires :)

An amazing blend of sound. I usually don't step into this sort of music but after hearing about Patrick, I gave it go. I love this album now and I'm honestly hooked. 5 Stars.

Mr Woolf time

A beautiful album by Patrick Woolf, showing his ability to be experimental and daring. Admittedly all these tracks appealed to me, but some personal favourites include: 'The Libertine', 'Tristan' and 'The Gypsy King'. For me, Woolf has struck a balance between a multitude of genres, electronic and folk for example, and it just seems to work! This album takes us on quite a journey; through foot-stomping and emotional revelations, to Sussex Downs or even at one point on the Moors with Heathcliff. This album is raw and unpretentious and is perfect for all moods. Bravo, Patrick.

Biography

Born: 1983 in County Cork, Ireland

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s

Violinist/singer/songwriter Patrick Wolf began experimenting with sound at the age of 11. While his peers were exploring the frivolity of youth, the precocious preteen was dabbling in four-track recording, eventually building an arsenal of instruments that included junk-shop organs and a home-built theremin. At the age of 14 he joined the pop-art collective Minty, a venture that caught the eyes and ears of Fat Cat Records, which went on to supply the youth with a computer and mixing tools for aid...
Full bio

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